September 20, 2015

During a transitional era for both personal injury settlement planning and structured settlements, participating professionals are fortunate to have multiple upcoming educational opportunities to update and expand their knowledge. Here is an overview of recommended upcoming national conferences listed chronologically. Note: some associations restrict conference attendence to association members.

NAMSAP 2015 Annual Conference - September 30 - October 2 in New Orleans. The National Alliance of Medicare Set-Aside Professionals (NAMSAP) is "the only non-profit association exclusively addressing the issues and challenges of the Medicare Secondary Payer Statute and its impact on workers’ compensation and liability settlements". Medicare set-aside arrangements (MSAs) represent an increasingly important submarket for structured settlements. One of the innovative features of this conference: NAMSAP has developed an App so attendees can stay connected before, during and following the conference. Among the speakers, S2KM's Managing Director, Patrick Hindert, and Ann Koerner will lead a discussion titled: "How the Affordable Care Act Impacts Medicare, Medicare Compliance and MSAs". For S2KM's most recent NAMSAP reporting, see: NAMSAP 2015 Winter Regional Conference .

Stetson 2015 SNT Conference - October 14-16 in St. Petersburg, Florida. Stetson Law School's National Conference on Special Needs Trusts (SNTs) is widely recognized as the preeminent educational forum for this topic. The two-day conference offers one day of "Basics" plus one day of "Advanced" SNT education plus two additional and optional pre-conference half-day programs ("The Tax Intensive" and "Pooled Trusts"). Similar to MSAs, SNTs represent a strategic submarket for structured settlements. Among important recent developments: 1) the impact of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) on existing and prospective SNTs; 2) The Special Needs Trust Fairness Act, recently approved unanimously by the U.S. Senate, would correct a previous legislative error and allow individuals with disabilities, who have capacity to create their own SNTs.

NSSTA 2015 Fall Educational Conference - October 28-30 in Phoenix, AZ. The National Structured Settlement Trade Association (NSSTA) is "the leading voice of the structured settlement industry" with nearly 1200 individual members. NSSTA has previously announced an "Industry Growth Initiative" - "designed to identify opportunities to expand the use of structured settlements and bring those opportunities to the structured settlement marketplace" - which appears to focus multiple growth-oriented goals NSSTA president Michael Goodman identified during NSSTA's 2015 Annual Meeting. The first progress report for this Growth Initiative is scheduled to occur during NSSTA's Fall Conference. As a prelude to its Growth Initiative, NSSTA commissioned a three-part survey of traditional structured settlement stakeholders which S2KM reviewed in previous blog posts: senior claims executives (Part 1); front line claims professionals (Part 2); and plaintiff attorneys (Part 3).

NASP 2015 Annual Conference - November 10-12 in Las Vegas. The National Association of Settlement Purchasers (NASP), "the only trade association related to the secondary market for structured settlements, ... is dedicated to ensuring the secondary market for [such] transfers remains fair, competitive, and transparent." Following years of conflict between the primary and secondary structured settlement markets, an historic "President's Panel" will highlight NASP's 2015 conference featuring the respective presidents of NSSTA (Michael Goodman) and NASP (Patricia LaBorde). This event was preceded by NSSTA inviting LaBorde to speak at the NSSTA 2014 Fall Educational Conference. and appears to signify increased cooperation between the two associations extending to legislation as well as education. Among other speakers, S2KM's Patrick Hindert will provide "A Primer on Special Needs Trusts and Medicare Set-Asides" for secondary market attendees. For S2KM's most recent NASP reporting, see: NASP 2014 Annual Conference .

Evolve 2015 QSF Symposium - November 12-13 in Memphis. Organized "to provide a forum for open dialogue that helps shape industry developments", Evolve Bank and Trust's Annual Qualified Settlement Fund (QSF) Symposium offers a valuable and unique addition to the growing number of personal injury settlement planning conferences and educational resources. Although Rev. Proc. 93-34 permits QSFs to make IRC 130 qualified assignments, and no tax authority exists prohibiting single claimant QSFs, structured settlement annuity providers currently refuse to accept single claimant QSFs which they broadly define to encompass claims by family members, plaintiff attorneys, lien holders and creditors. Evolve's recent symposiums have avoided the single claimant controversy and focused instead on other important QSF and settlement planning issues. For S2KM's most recent Evolve reporting, see: Evolve 2014 QSF Symposium.

NSSTA 2015 MSSC Program - November 18-21 at the University of Notre Dame. Complementing and extending its Certified Structured Settlement Consultant (CSSC) Professional Certification Program, NSSTA has added a new Master's Certificate in Structured Settlement Consulting (MSSC). This program is one of multiple new educational initiatives, including Structures 202 (a comprehensive program of case management fundamentals and business development opportunities) and "NSSTA University" (whereby NSSTA will partner with any member to secure CE credits for member-sponsored educational seminars or insurance claims departments or law firms), which NSSTA is offering to attract and train "Next Generation" professionals to grow the structured settlement market.

NAELA 2016 Summit - January 28-30 in Newport Beach, CA. The National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys (NAELA) was the first and remains the largest U.S. professional association focused on the needs of elder and special needs law attorneys. NAELA was founded in 1986 and now consists of more than 4300 attorney members. Because NAELA was slow to embrace special needs as a separate strategic market, NAELA members independently formed the Special Needs Alliance (Alliance) and the Academy of Special Needs Planners (ASNP). Most Alliance and ASNP member, however, remain active NAELA members and look to NAELA as their primary political lobbying resource. NAELA member resources include the NAELA Journal which has published a series of excellent articles about the Affordable Care Act.

AANLCP 2016 Annual Conference - February 5-8 in San Antonio. The increasing number, importance and roles of life care planners represents one of the most significant developments S2KM has observed while attending recent structured settlement and settlement planning stakeholder educational conferences. Life care planners predominate the membership of NAMSAP and have been featured speakers at other recent structured settlement and settlement planning stakeholder conferences. Multiple life care planners exhibit at American Association for Justice (AAJ) national conferences. The American Association of Nurse Life Care Planners (AANLCP) is one of two national associations of life care planners. During 2014, S2KM published an interview with nurse life care planner Wendie Howland. Patrick Hindert's article "How the Affordable Care Act Impacts Life Care Planners" was featured in the 2014 Winter Issue of the AANLCP Journal.

AAJ 2016 Winter Conference - February 27 - March 1 - Boca Raton, FL. The American Association for Justice (AAJ, formerly ATLA) "is the world's largest trial bar" whose mission includes supporting "the work of attorneys in their efforts to insure that any person who is injured by the misconduct or negligence of others can obtain justice in America's courtrooms ..." Plaintiff attorneys, however, also perform essential settlement planning roles which include recommending appropriate product and service providers to their clients. As one result, plaintiff attorneys represent the primary marketing target for companies and professionals offering settlement planning products and services - as well as a logical priority marketing target for growing the structured settlement market. Multiple companies offering structured settlement, lien resolution, MSA compliance, life care planning, legal finance and economic consulting services were among the 141 sponsors and exhibitors at the AAJ 2014 Annual Meeting. NSSTA recently commissioned a Plaintiff Attorney Structured Settlement Survey.

ASNP 2016 Annual Conference - March 10-12 in Tucson, AZ. The Academy of Special Needs Planners (ASNP) and the Special Needs Alliance are both national associations of special needs attorneys most of whom are also members of NAELA and many of whom also increasingly specialize in personal injury settlement planning. ASNP recently opened its membership (with a vetting process) to non-legal (finance/insurance) professionals and also sponsored a 12-part Settlement Planning Webinar Series. Unlike educational programs sponsored by NAELA and SNA, ASNP's annual conferences are open to non-members. For S2KM's most recent ASNP reporting, see: ASNP 2015 Annual Conference - which includes a comparison of settlement planning vs. special needs planning.

SSP 2016 Annual Conference - March 10-12 - Tucson, AZ. Society of Settlement Planners (SSP) members "work with the injured party to create a comprehensive and integrated settlement plan focused on meeting the needs of the claimant." They also "seek to elevate the profession of settlement planning by promoting ethical industry standards, providing education and certification and knowledge transfer among its members." For the first time, SSP's 2016 conference will feature joint educational sessions and social events with ASNP. For S2KM's most recent ASNP reporting, see: SSP 2015 Annual Conference Part 1 and Part 2.

December 22, 2014

During the late 1970s, and throughout the 1980s, when defendants retained exclusive control of structured settlements, many brokers and their liability insurance company clients referred to unsuccessful sales as "cash outs". Their professional interests and curiosity were narrowly defined and focused upon their own product to the exclusion of other settlement related products and services.

With the advent of plaintiff structured settlement brokers, continuing legislative and regulatory developments, plus an expanding array of settlement planning professionals, products and product providers, structured settlements are now viewed by most stakeholders as a subset of the larger and more complex personal injury settlement planning market.

For future success, a new generation of structured settlement leaders must look beyond structured settlements and learn to re-position their product as a fundamental and catalytic settlement planning component. This strategic adjustment requires a more comprehensive understanding of, and interaction with, other professional associations whose members also provide settlement planning products and services.

During 2014, S2KM attended 13 national educational conferences sponsored by such professional associations. What follows are 2014 summaries, from a settlement planning perspective, of the educational programs offered by these professional associations plus links to related S2KM reporting. Prior S2KM blog posts provide 2014 summaries of the primary and secondary structured settlement markets. A subsequent S2KM blog post will summarize continuing 2014 developments related to ELNY and Reliance.

Recommending appropriate settlement planning professional resources to their clients; and

Retaining ultimate responsibility for effectuating settlements.

As one result, plaintiff attorneys represent the primary marketing target for for companies and professionals offering settlement planning services. Seven primary market brokers, one structured settlement annuity provider and one factoring company were among the 141 sponsors and exhibitors at the AAJ 2014 Annual Conference which also included companies offering lien resolution, MSA compliance, life care planning, legal finance and economic consulting services.

Notable features of the 2014 AAJ conferences:

AAJ's educational programs focused on litigation issues with no structured settlement, no Affordable Care Act (ACA) and almost no settlement planning presentations.

By inviting NASP President Patricia LaBorde and SSP President Neil Johnson to speak at its members-only 2014 Fall Educational Conference, NSSTA took a symbolic step toward restoring its original vision as articulated by David Ringler, NSSTA's first president: "a place where everyone and anyone can sit down with each other and discuss the issues and viewpoints regardless of beliefs is the most important reason for NSSTA."

For the past several years, NSSTA's leadership has superimposed a political litmus test for membership, as well as for topics and speakers at its educational conferences. NSSTA's near-sighted strategy has limited the potential growth of structured settlements within the larger and more complex settlement planning market and created multiple challenges for the next generation of structured settlement leaders.

Assuming settlement planning includes adjustments during an injury victim's lifetime, structured settlement transfer (factoring) companies should be included among settlement planning participants. Like NSSTA, its primary market counterpart, NASP and its members face serious challenges which NASP president Patricia LaBorde acknowledged during NASP's 2014 Annual Conference.

"There are some forces working against us right now" Laborde stated, "and we need to remain diligent so our customers (structured settlement recipients who sell payment rights to NASP member companies) continue to have access to liquidity." These "negative" forces include predicted secondary market "chaos" resulting from the Washington Square v. RSL case as well as market restrictions resulting from anti-assignment lawsuits.

Shared educational dialogue among representatives of NASP, NSSTA and SSP during 2014 appear to support the possibility of increasing primary and secondary market integration as predicted by Peter Arnold during his NASP conference presentation.

ASNP is one of three national associations of attorneys whose members practice special needs (SN) planning. SN planning encompasses individuals with congenital and developmental defects, as well as personal injury victims, and therefore represents a parallel market which overlaps with personal injury settlement planning.

For the past eight years, ASNP has sponsored some of the best educational programs addressing settlement planning topics including such fundamental issues as: "know your client", "needs analysis", "best practices", "industry standards" and "product suitability", as well as "professional responsibility, qualifications and liability".

Expanding its settlement planning educational programs, ASNP is currently sponsoring a 12-part settlement planning webinar series which demonstrates both the growing importance of settlement planning for SN attorneys as well as the broad scope of settlement planning topics.

NAMSAP is the only national professional association whose singular focus is Medicare Set-Aside (MSA) arrangements. NAMSAP's growth has paralleled the expansion of workers compensation MSAs (WCMSAs) to satisfy the requirements of the Medicare Secondary Payer (MSP) Act. Enacted in 1980, the MSP Act requires certain insurers, including liability, automobile, no-fault and workers compensation insurers, to make payment first for services to Medicare beneficiaries regarding claimed injuries, with Medicare responsible only as a “secondary payer.”

The Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) published a WCMSA Reference Guide (WCRG) on March 29, 2013 plus a WCRG Version 2.0 on November 7, 2013. Both address structured settlement issues and provide guidelines for their utilization. WCMSAs represent one of the few submarkets where structured settlements sales have increased since 2008 - in large part because the method CMS requires for calculating WCMSA present values provides an inherent cost advantage for annuities compared with lump sum alternatives.

CMS withdrew its Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) related to liability MSAs in October 2014 because it failed to gain approval from the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Therefore, settlement planners must continue to analyze each liability case individually to determine whether and how to protect Medicare's interests.

During NAMSAP's 2014 Regional Conference, Roy Franco predicted the following settlement planning changes likely to result from the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013, implementation of the ACA and the still anticipated CMS rules for liability MSAs: "workers' compensation, liability and no-fault insurers will all become primary payers vis a vis Medicare, Medicaid and ACA health providers" as part of integrated settlement planning models similar to WCMSAs." Franco added, however, that different state models are likely to develop as a result of both state-specific collateral source rules and the new Medicaid reimbursement rules promulgated by the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013.

Organized "to provide a forum for open dialogue that helps shape industry developments", the 2014 Evolve QSF Symposium avoided the single claimant controversy and focused instead on other important QSF and settlement planning issues including:

NAELA was the first and remains the largest U.S. professional association focused on the needs of elder and special needs law attorneys. Responding to its own strategic challenges, NAELA organized its 2014 Annual Conference to address what it perceives to be its two primary strategic issues: 1) the future needs of persons with disabilities; and 2) the future of elder law.

Compared with ASNP, however, NAELA's educational programs rarely address settlement planning or structured settlements. When NAELA members discuss special needs planning, many tend to think about developmental (as opposed to personal injury) disabilities. Unfortunately, many NAELA members view structured settlements negatively despite familiarity with the concept and a general affinity for annuities.

December 02, 2014

Despite unresolved issues, utilization of IRC 468B Qualified Settlement Funds (QSFs) in "single event" cases, as well as class action and mass tort cases, is expanding, and increasingly represents the preferred method for resolving complex personal injury claims, according to participants at the Third Annual QSF Symposium sponsored by Evolve Bank and Trust on November 14, 2014 in Memphis, Tennessee.

Various speakers estimated the number of QSF cases annually currently exceeds 2500, equally split between single event cases and class action/mass tort cases, increasing by 25% per year. This expansion has occurred as more settlement planning stakeholders learn about the advantages of QSFs - and despite single claimant QSF tax uncertainty.

Although Rev. Proc. 93-34 permits QSFs to make IRC 130 qualified assignments, and no tax authority exists prohibiting single claimant QSFs, structured settlement annuity providers currently refuse to accept single claimant QSFs which they broadly define to encompass claims by family members, plaintiff attorneys, lien holders and creditors.

Organized "to provide a forum for open dialogue that helps shape industry developments", the 2014 QSF Symposium completely avoided the single claimant controversy and focused instead on other important QSF and settlement planning issues.

In his legal treatise, "Qualified Settlement Funds and Section 468B", published in 2009, Robert Wood explains QSFs as follows: "Their primary objective is to gather and administer cash or assets and determine the amounts and exact nature of payments that the plaintiffs, attorneys, and other claimants will receive..... QSFs benefit both plaintiffs and defendants alike. They are separate entities for federal income tax purposes and are flexible and easy to establish."

Section 3.08B of "Structured Settlements and Periodic Payment Judgments" (S2P2J) summarizes the benefits of QSFs in more detail: "defendants obtain a binding release from liability by making a currently-deductible payment into a court or government-approved Fund; while claimants, who have no tax consequence as a result of this payment into a Fund, are then afforded as much time as they need to sort out important issues of their own, such as allocating settlement shares, obtaining court approvals for minors or other legally-disabled claimants, resolving liens (which sometimes involve complex pay-back and set-aside issues as to Medicaid and Medicare), and deciding on forms of distribution (whether cash, structured settlements, or special needs trusts that may be used to preserve eligibility for certain government benefits)."

so that needs assessment and settlement design follow the negotiation (and funding) steps rather than precede them.

Highlighted Issues

QSF Administrator - The QSF Symposium emphasized the important role of the QSF administrator as well as the services he or she may provide and/or require including: investment, expense and distribution management; tax reporting and filing; legal and regulatory compliance; and fraud control. The QSF administer appears best positioned to quarterback the QSF settlement planning team. An apparent need exists for more (and better qualified) QSF administrators.

Life Care Planners and Case Managers - Life care planners and case managers are frequently overlooked in traditional settlement planning. Life care planners are rarely asked to revise their pre-trial and trial-focused life care plans to account for collateral sources or the actual amount of settlement funding. Case managers (who are separately certified) increasingly are retained to "monitor" settlement plans by providing post-settlement medical advice and services for serious personal injury victims.

Compensation Issues - For QSFs to achieve their potential improvements for single event settlement planning, multiple compensation issues must still be addressed and resolved:

Administrators - The QSF Symposium devoted one of its panels to administrator compensation issues, including: who pays their fee? what fee is appropriate for what services? and how should the fee be calculated (flat fee; per claimant fee; or fee based on QSF earnings)? Complicating these issues, many attorney QSF administrators play multiple roles (trustee; administrator) in addition to drafting QSF documents and making court appearances.

Structured settlement brokers - In many single event QSFs, the plaintiff structured settlement broker plays key roles: 1) selecting and paying the QSF administrator; 2) performing "value added" settlement planning services as part of his/her contingent commission compensation. Not only do these arrangements create potential conflicts of interest ("needs based" selling determined by the needs of the broker and administrator), they also increase a broker's risk of loss in the the event of an unsuccessful structured settlement sale.

Additional compensation issues arise when: 1) a case settles with no allowance for QSF expenses; 2) a case involves minors or incompetents requiring a guardian and court to approve QSF expenses; and also because 3) in the current low interest rate environment, QSF fees often exceed investment yields. Although not discussed during the Symposium, defense structured settlement brokers have opposed QSFs fearing a reduction or the elimination of their contingent commission compensation.

Tax topics - The QSF Symposium featured three tax topics:

State taxation - State taxation of QSFs is inconsistent with little guidance. Many states have not yet addressed QSF taxation. Potential penalties exist for failure to file including interest on any unpaid liability without any statute of limitations. QSF administrators are advised to follow a two step analysis: 1) can a specific state tax a QSF based upon the situs of the court or the administrator or the bank where funds are deposited? 2) assuming a filing obligation exists, how will a state tax a QSF - as a corporation or a trust?

Foreign structured settlement assignment companies - Potential tax issues exist for defendants, plaintiffs and the foreign assignment company. Can a defendant deduct its payment to a foreign assignment company? When does a plaintiff receive payments for tax purposes and what is the character of those payments? Does the foreign assignment company recognize income when it receives an assignment payment? If yes, will it be considered active or passive income or does a treaty override exist?

Structured attorney fees - When properly arranged, structured attorney fees allow a contingently-compensated attorney to defer portions of his or her compensation and pay tax upon receipt regardless of the type of case or whether the client receives a lump sum or periodic payments.

Education issues - Single event QSF education is needed for plaintiff attorneys and judges who are still unfamiliar with the QSF concept. Among the most likely education providers are special needs attorneys who serve as QSF administrators or trustees and structured settlement brokers. In addition to litigating attorneys and judges, QSF educational targets should include other settlement planning stakeholders such as: liability insurers; settlement trustees, guardians; mediators; and life care planners.

Conclusion - Evolve's QSF Symposium offers a valuable and unique addition to the growing number of personal injury settlement planning conferences and educational resources. When Robert Wood's QSF legal treatise was published in 2009, he acknowledged his analysis "clearly enters unchartered ground". Congratulations to Chairman Andy Cook and Evolve Bank and Trust for helping to survey this unchartered QSF terrain by sponsoring an educational event specifically designed to promote discussion and exchange of ideas about QSF issues, standards and best practices.

September 29, 2014

During this transitional era for both settlement planning and the primary and secondary structured settlement markets, participating professionals are fortunate to have multiple educational opportunities this Fall to update and expand their knowledge.

July 23, 2014

Single-claimant qualified settlement funds (SCQSFs) represent one of the two most politically divisive issues within the structured settlement industry - with the National Structured Settlement Trade Association (NSSTA) opposing and the Society of Settlement Planners (SSP) promoting SCQSF use.

Tax expert Robert W. Wood , a prolific author, whose specialties include structured settlements and personal injury settlement planning, has published a new article in the June 23, 2014 of "Tax Notes" titled "Reprising Single-Claimant Qualified Settlement Funds".

QSFs, or section 468B funds, as explained in Wood's article, are designed to resolve litigation. "Their primary objective is to gather and administer cash or assets and determine the amounts and exact nature of payments that the plaintiffs, attorneys, and other claimants will receive..... QSFs benefit both plaintiffs and defendants alike. They are separate entities for federal income tax purposes and are flexible and easy to establish."

The benefits of QSFs are summarized in Section 3.08B of "Structured Settlements and Periodic Payment Judgments" (S2P2J): "defendants obtain a binding release from liability by making a currently-deductible payment into a court or government-approved Fund; while claimants, who have no tax consequence as a result of this payment into a Fund, are then afforded as much time as they need to sort out important issues of their own, such as allocating settlement shares, obtaining court approvals for minors or other legally-disabled claimants, resolving liens (which sometimes involve complex pay-back and set-aside issues as to Medicaid and Medicare), and deciding on forms of distribution (whether cash, structured settlements, or special needs trusts that may be used to preserve eligibility for certain government benefits)."

Having surveyed the debate and framed the issues five years ago, at which time Wood concluded the proponents of SCQSFs had the better argument, Wood prefaces his new article by asking: "Has Anything Changed?"

Wood's new article:

Reviews the legal background and arguments favoring and opposing SCQSFs as well as the requirements and advantages of QSFs.

Confirms Wood's opinion favoring proponents' arguments for SCQSFs - while cautioning taxpayers to try to set up QSFs with multiple claimants:

"The language of the tax code and regulations suggests there should be no controversy."

"Reg. section 1.468B-1(c)(2) suggests the possibility of a single claim, mentioning 'one or more contested or uncontested claims' and an event giving rise to 'at least one claim asserting liability.'

"With the focus on the claim or claims, not the claimant or claimants, a plurality of claimants seems to be unimportant."

"Congress appears to have intended QSFs to operate as a statutory exception to both the economic benefit and constructive receipt doctrines."

Predicts the IRS is more likely to "establish some sort of antiabuse rule addressing the inappropriate use of QSFs to defer income rather than establishing a minimum number of plaintiffs or claimants."

Has Anything Changed?

Beyond removal of the issue from the IRS priority guidance plan, however, Wood's new article does not directly address his primary question: "Has Anything Changed" since 2009 that impacts the utilization of SCQSFs?

The answer is "Yes". Most significantly, unlike 2009, no structured settlement annuity providers currently accept SCQSFs. They have effectively shut down this strategic personal injury settlement planning opportunity for a wide scope of actual and/or potential structured settlement cases.

Prudential, for example, sent a communication to its structured settlement agents dated March 19, 2012 stating, in part:

"Prudential recently reviewed its underwriting criteria with respect to single claimant QSF cases. As a result, effective immediately, we will no longer write cases stemming from a single claimant QSF."

"Prudential defines a single claimant QSF as a fund either established for the benefit of a single claimant or, for multiple claimants who do not have “competing interests” (e.g., plaintiff family members). Prudential will not provide for “derivative” claims from the injured party, i.e., a loss of consortium or an emotional distress claim by the parents and/or siblings for the personal injury victim."

"It is Prudential’s position that when the funds are deposited into a QSF for a single claimant, and there are no other factors to be negotiated under the settlement, the claimant has received economic benefit of the assets. Prudential does not consider lien holders or other non-claimant creditors (attorneys, medical providers, Medicare or Medicaid) as substantial additional obligations to be satisfied prior to the claimant’s ownership of the assets transferred to the QSF."

Despite the current closure of the SCQSF structured settlement market, SCQSF analysis and debate has expanded since 2009 - thanks significantly to Wood's SCQSF writing and speaking. Examples:

Why do opponents object to SCQSFs - and why do they continue to broaden the scope of SCQSFs to encompass arguably multiple claims by family members, plaintiff attorneys, lien holders and creditors?

Without more definitive tax clarification, structured settlement annuity providers are concerned about the original legislative intent of IRC section 468B, related economic benefit issues, and the potential litigation impact from lawsuits that could arise if SCQSFs are ruled invalid.

Defendants and their insurers view structured settlements as valuable "needs analysis" and "bridge-the-gap" negotiating tools they would lose if single event personal injury cases were routinely resolved using QSFs.

Although Robert Wood's most recent SCQSF article does not attempt to resolve these SCQSF objections (and they may not be resolvable), his SCQSF "reprising" hopefully will help motivate structured settlement and settlement planning stakeholders to better identify shared SCQSF interests and to seek further SCQSF tax clarification including what constitutes multiple claimants for purposes of IRC section 468B.

December 28, 2012

Compared with the structured settlement primary market, which was characterized by continuing sales declines in 2012, the related settlement planning market appears to have experienced growth and vitality in 2012.

The
primary evidence of this growth and vitality consisted of the
increasing number of educational conferences addressing settlement
planning topics during 2012. These included:

Various National Academy of Elder Law Attorney (NAELA) Conferences - of which S2KM attended the 2012 Ohio NAELA Unprogram.

One
of the challenges for measuring the growth of the settlement planning
market is the lack of market metrics. For example, despite continuing
market inquiries, S2KM has been unable to identify reliable national
market metrics for qualified settlement funds, special needs trusts,
settlement trusts, or Medicare set-aside arrangements.

Towers Watson Studies

The most valuable market research for settlement planning S2KM has identified has been the Annual Studies of United States Tort Costs published by Towers Watson (formerly Towers Perrin) since 1985. These studies:

Based upon Towers Watson's most recent 2011 Annual Study and utilizing Tower Watson's 2002 "best estimate" of payout percentages, S2KM estimates, that at least since 2006, more than $160 billion of United States tort costs annually have represented payments to injury victims and their attorneys.

Settlement Planning Issues

Among many settlement planning issues, S2KM viewed the following as the most strategically important during 2012:

October 01, 2012

Writing publicly about conferences you have not personally attended
can be dangerous and unprofessional. So also is quoting, and/or
misquoting, portions of copyrighted presentations out of context -
especially when you rely on unnamed sources for your material.

Professional protocols, however, have not prevented John Darer (in this blog post) from mischaracterizing my presentation at the QSF Symposium sponsored by Evolve Bank and Trust on September 27-28, 2012.

In his blog post, Darer falsely accuses me of highlighting the following "points" related to "[p]romises to pay periodic payments acquired in the secondary market":

The "points" John attributes to me did appear in the larger context of two copyrighted slides I presented and discussed at the QSF Symposium. They did not, however, apply to "promises to pay periodic payments acquired in the structured settlement market" - whatever that means. Nor did they apply generally to "structured settlement payment rights" purchased in the secondary market.

Instead, the "points"
John has lifted (out of context and without proper attribution or
permission) from two copyrighted slides refer to one specific type of
transaction that might indirectly utilize structured
settlement payment rights. And the purpose of the discussion, as I
stated during my presentation, was to highlight issues that need to be
addressed before this specific type of transaction will satisfy
marketplace due diligence.

Of
course, John actually would have had to attend the QSF Symposium - and
to have heard my presentation - to understand these nuances.

Concerning this same presentation John did not actually attend, he also writes: "This
represents one of the few occasions in over 8 years that Hindert has
highlighted anything substantially negative associated with structured
settlement transfers or investing in structured settlement payment
rights."

Having previously addressed this canard about S2KM's biased reporting, I refer readers, including John, to this blog post for S2KM's response.